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172:, 'apes of Cicero'. In general, radicals looked to Cicero primarily or only as a model of language. Anti-Ciceronianism, strongest in Germany, criticized such reliance on a pagan author as incompatible with a Christian age. By the time of
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establishing a
Ciceronian style for official papal documents in the 16th century. By that time, however, there was also a robust anti-Ciceronianism, as exemplified by Erasmus'
53:(1528). During the Renaissance, however, the term could have both positive and negative connotations, depending on whether slavish or creative imitation was in view.
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Anti-Ciceronianism was in practice often just moderate
Ciceronianism opposed to radical or strict Ciceronianism. In his dispute of 1485 with
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were widely known. His language, however, had little influence on
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in the 1st century. He was admired for his style in the
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Cicero's writing was already considered classical by
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employs it the same way in the title of his dialogue
184:, a new trend toward later Latin authors, such as
334:The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics
160:, who took Cicero to be the sole model to which
35:, 'a Ciceronian'. That term is contrasted with
336:, 4th ed. (Princeton University Press, 2017).
131:Oratio pro Cicerone contra Desiderium Erasmum
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27:(106–43 BC) and hold it up as a model of
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88:in 1345 and with the discovery of
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306:(Springer, 2022), pp. 747–750.
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19:was the tendency among the
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332:, in Roland Greene (ed.),
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117:in 1421. It culminated in
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148:Titlepage from Nizolio's
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223:Sebastián Fox Morcillo
218:Christophe de Longueil
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127:Julius Caesar Scaliger
164:authors should look,
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21:Renaissance humanists
371:Neo-Latin literature
366:Renaissance humanism
298:Fosca Mariani Zini,
268:Manfred Landfester,
125:. Against Erasmsus,
85:Epistulae ad Atticum
82:'s discovery of the
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270:"Ciceronianism"
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62:Middle Ages
37:christianus
360:Categories
239:References
139:Erasmianus
129:wrote his
91:De oratore
58:Quintilian
162:Neo-Latin
182:Tacitism
141:(1535).
80:Petrarch
186:Tacitus
45:Erasmus
376:Cicero
103:Brutus
100:, and
97:Orator
72:Topica
41:Jerome
25:Cicero
272:, in
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29:Latin
70:and
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113:de
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